Sunday, August 05, 2012

JUMP!!!!!!!....

A long, long time ago, like maybe when I was 7, Native Americans, (or Indians, as they were referred to when I was 7), hunted buffalo by stampeding them over a cliff, and then killing them after they were injured in the fall, if the fall didn't kill them in the first place. It was called a "buffalo jump".

Apparently, the hunters would wave blankets and animal skins in the air, shouting and carrying on something awful, and the buffalo would be so frightened that they would begin running towards the cliff and plummet to their ultimate deaths. I never really understood why. I suppose the buffalo might have thought the Indians had a bow and arrow, or a spear under the blanket. Even so, I think there were more buffalo than there were Indians, and it always seemed to me that the buffalo could have turned around, stood their ground, and not been any worse off, besides maintaining a little dignity along the way. I guess they thought they were somehow better off taking a header over the cliff.

I'm running for Congress on the Libertarian ticket this fall. I'll be voting for a lot of other Libertarians on the ballot, too. A lot of Republicans I know are running around, waving their arms, claiming that we all need to vote for Republicans instead of Libertarians out of fear that some Democrats might be elected or re-elected.

I don't share their concerns. When I examine the GOP's support of the growing federal government, and the growing deficit, along with the Patriot Act, the NDAA, corporate subsidies, foreign interventionism, Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, taxes, taxes, taxes...etc., I can't really see the advantage to blindly voting for Republicans anymore than I could see the advantage of the buffalo jumping over a cliff.

I decided a few years ago to leave the GOP and take a stand for smaller, Constitutionally limited government.

0 Comments:

Links to this post:

About Me

I'm the chairman of the Libertarian Party of Wayne County. I've been married for 40 years to the only elected Libertarian judge in Indiana. We are the parents of three grown children and the grandparents of five beautiful granddaughters and two grandsons.
I enjoy writing about some of my experiences, and I hope somebody enjoys reading it.